Sediments and bedform mapping of the Lower Saxony Wadden Sea and North Sea (Germany)

Author(s):  
Francesco Mascioli ◽  
Tina Kunde

<p>Seafloor mapping is the subject of several worldwide research programs dealing with the growing awareness that changes of the marine environmental conditions have to be accurately monitored. The monitoring requirements strongly stimulate the scientific interest in innovative mapping methods and tools, which should be exploitable within the extensive mapping programs carried out by governmental agencies and institutes.</p><p>The Coastal Research Station within the NLWKN is carrying out a long-term program to map subtidal areas of the Lower Saxony coastal and marine waters, adopting a methodological approach aimed to increase objectivity and repeatability of results.</p><p>The study area is one of the world’s largest tidal system encompassing a multitude of transitional zones between land, marine, and estuarine environments. The geological and geomorphological setting is closely related to the Late Quaternary evolution of the North Sea and the actual morphodynamic processes. The seabed is made of Holocene sand to silt deposits and peat layers. They overlay Pleistocene fluvioglacial deposits, made of sands, rocks, and boulders, which locally outcrop in small areas of the North Sea and in the deepest sectors of the Wadden Sea tidal inlets.</p><p>Even though existing maps provide a good broad-scaled representation of the sediments distribution, they were produced by the interpolation of grab-samples therefore lacking of spatial resolution and bedforms characterization. The ongoing mapping program provides full-coverage detailed sedimentological and geomorphological data, by means of swath-bathymetrical systems, subbottom profiler, and validation samples. The methodological approach integrates bathymetric, backscatter, and stratigraphic information to characterize bedforms and substrates. Bathymetry and seabed images are interpreted using geomorphometric as well as object-based image analysis, to increase the objectivity and generate reproducible results.</p><p>Maps outline common sedimentological and geomorphological features across all the observed Wadden Sea tidal inlets, which are made of fine sandy sediments and narrow outcrops of peat layers on the main tidal channels slopes. Both erosive and depositional geomorphological processes are present, represented by several orders of scarps, mainly connected to alternations of hard-substrates and unconsolidated sands, and medium to very large sand waves. Moreover, data reveal high-resolution information about hard-substrate outcrops in the North Sea area.</p><p>The mapping program provides new detailed geological-geomorphological features of a very dynamic coastal area, using repeatable and objective methods. The combination of different datasets and tools allows the quantitative analysis of the complex subtidal morphology, the correlation of bedforms and substrates. Resulting products will be further developed for habitat mapping purposes and morphological and hydro-dynamical modelling.</p>

1991 ◽  
Vol 24 (10) ◽  
pp. 77-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Klamer ◽  
R. W. P. M. Laane ◽  
J. M. Marquenie

From literature data it is calculated that on an annual basis, 11 to 17 tonnes of PCBs enter the North Sea. Largest sources are the Atlantic Ocean and the atmosphere: together they account for 60-79% of the total input. Sources with greatest impact are the rivers, sewers and sludge. Highest concentrations are found close to the Dutch shore and in the German Bight. The PCB levels result in adverse effects on the seal population in the Wadden Sea. Of the total world PCB production, at least 57% is still in use and their future dispersal into the oceans cannot easily be controlled. If the increase in ocean PCB concentration continues, it may ultimately result in the extinction of fish-eating marine mammals.


2007 ◽  
Vol 42 (3) ◽  
pp. 271-288 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mona Hoppenrath ◽  
Bank Beszteri ◽  
Gerhard Drebes ◽  
Hannelore Halliger ◽  
Justus E. E. Van Beusekom ◽  
...  

1989 ◽  
Vol 43 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 417-433 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karsten Reise ◽  
Elisabeth Herre ◽  
Manfred Sturm

2016 ◽  
Vol 66 (5) ◽  
pp. 671-690 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Jacob ◽  
Emil Vassilev Stanev ◽  
Yinglong Joseph Zhang

Author(s):  
M. Beck ◽  
M. Grunwald ◽  
C. Kohlmeier ◽  
O. Dellwig ◽  
H.-J. Brumsack

Author(s):  
Jacobus Hofstede

The Wadden Sea environment is a coastal tidal environment situated between the North Sea and the northwestern European Lowlands. It stretches over a distance of about 450 km from Den Helder in The Netherlands to the peninsula of Skallingen in Denmark. The approximately 10,000 km2 large Wadden Sea is a coastal sediment sink that developed in the course of the Holocene transgression. It resulted from a specific combination of sediment availability (mainly from the North Sea) and a hydrodynamic regime of tides and waves. In its present state, the Wadden Sea environment consists of extensive tidal flats (the wadden), tidal gullies and inlets, salt marshes, and about twenty-four sandy barrier islands. Further, four estuaries exist that discharge into the Wadden Sea. The Wadden Sea may best be characterized by the words ‘dynamic’ and ‘extreme’; dynamic from a geo-morphological point of view, extreme in its biology. According to Spiegel (1997), with each flood phase a tidal energy input in the order of 2.2 thousand MW occurs in the Wadden Sea of Schleswig-Holstein (Germany). This energy input, combined with the energy impact of wind, waves, and storm surges, results in strong morphological processes. Flora and fauna in the Wadden Sea have to adapt to these intense morphodynamics. Further, they have to endure the permanent change of flood and ebb and fluctuations in salinity, as well as high water temperatures during summer and occasional ice cover during winter. As a result of these extreme environmental conditions, a highly specialized biosystem with about 4,800 species has developed (Heydemann 1998). In its present state the Wadden Sea is one of the last remaining near-natural large-scale ecosystems in central Europe. Its ecological significance is underlined by the fact that 250 animal species live exclusively here (Heydemann 1998). Furthermore, nowhere else in Europe is an ecosystem of this size visited by more birds per surface area for the purpose of feeding. However, the Wadden Sea is subjected to considerable human influences, e.g. the input of nutrients and pollutants, fisheries, dredging, boat traffic, and tourism (de Jong et al. 1999).


2018 ◽  
Vol 61 (4) ◽  
pp. 365-371 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica Schiller ◽  
Dagmar Lackschewitz ◽  
Christian Buschbaum ◽  
Karsten Reise ◽  
Shaojun Pang ◽  
...  

Abstract The kelp Undaria pinnatifida, native to East Asian shores, was unintentionally introduced with Pacific oysters into the Mediterranean in 1971. Intentional introduction from there to the French Atlantic coast 12 years later led to a gradual spread to the British Isles and the North Sea. Here, we report on the northernmost established population in continental Europe, and suggest a further spread into Scandinavian waters to be almost inevitable. In 2016, several thalli were found washed ashore at the eastern side of the island of Sylt in the northern Wadden Sea (German Bight, Eastern North Sea). Most specimens bore fertile sporophylls and thallus lengths of >1 m were common. In June 2017, 91 sporophytes were found attached to a mixed bed of Pacific oysters and native blue mussels, located just below low tide level in a moderately sheltered position. Mean thallus length was 0.2 m and the longest 0.7 m. Most had distinctive sporophylls and released spores in the laboratory. From sporophylls collected in the previous year, we successfully reared a new generation, demonstrating the kelp’s potential for further spread by natural means or human vectors.


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